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The Financing Decision B

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This may explain why we do not see high levels of debt financing in high-tech firms. ... Equity is first in the pecking order and last ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Financing Decision B


1
The Financing Decision (B)
2
Modigliani and Miller II
  • With Taxes

3
  • How are operating profits (EBIT) split?
  • EBIT 2000
  • Cash Flows to Investors CF(debt) CF(Equity)
    1200
  • Interest tax shield Interest ? Tax Rate 0

4
  • Now look at the same company using 5000 debt

5
  • Now how are operating profits split?
  • EBIT 2000
  • Cash Flows to Investors
  • CF(debt) CF(Equity) 500 900 1400
  • Interest tax shield Interest ? Tax Rate 500
    ? 40 200

6
Their Conclusions
  • The Interest tax shield revisited
  • Tax Shield Interest ? Tax Rate 500 ? 40
    200
  • Now lets assume that this tax shield is a
    perpetuity
  • Proposition I
  • VL VU PV(Tax Shield) VU TCD
  • VU 10,000
  • VL 10,000 2,000 12,000
  • D 5000 EL 7000
  • Conclusion A firm should use as much debt as
    possible.

7
  • Proposition II
  • kE(L) kE(U) (1-T) (kE(U) kD) (D/E)
  • Assume kE(U) 12
  • WACC
  • Like a world with no taxes, leverage increases
    the risk and the required return on equity.

8
  • The unlevered firm
  • WACCU kE(U) 12
  • The levered firm
  • kE(L) kE(U) (1-T) (kE(U) kD) (D/EL)
  • kE(L) 12 (1-.40)(12 - 10)(5000/7000)
  • kE(L) 12.86

9
  • What was it before???
  • Increasing debt reduced our WACC making the firm
    more valuable

10
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11
Summary of MM With Taxes
  • As we use more debt the WACC decreases
  • Due to the interest tax shield
  • The lower WACC results in a higher firm value for
    firms that use debt.
  • The cost of equity increases with the use of debt
    but not as quickly as the WACC decreases.
  • Firms should be 100 debt financed
  • Obviously not possible
  • Assumes no bankruptcy costs

12
What about Bankruptcy Costs
  • The debt used by corporations provides a valuable
    interest tax shield for a firm.
  • The discussion so far has ignored the cost of
    bankruptcy.
  • Bankruptcy-related costs depend on three things
  • The probability of bankruptcy
  • The costs the firm will incur if financial
    distress arises, and
  • The adverse effect that the potential for
    bankruptcy has on current operations.
  • Bankruptcy costs certainly increase with the
    level of debt

13
A Hypothetical Analysis
14
Bankruptcy Costs
  • Direct Costs
  • Legal and administrative costs of bankruptcy
  • Indirect Costs
  • The costs associated with trying to manage a firm
    in bankruptcy
  • Efforts to prevent further deterioration are
    often undermined by the delays and legal tangles
    of bankruptcy.

15
Financial Distress Costs
  • Not every firm in financial trouble goes
    bankrupt.
  • What costs are generated in financial distress
  • The cost of investments that are forsaken because
    of cash problems.
  • The cost of important maintenance and upkeep that
    might be skipped to conserve cash.

16
Financial Distress Costs
  • During conflicts the shareholders and debt
    holders may battle over business decisions that
    affect them unequally.
  • Games
  • Risk shifting
  • Refusing to contribute new capital
  • Etc.

17
Costs of Financial Distress
  • Varies with assets
  • Firms with tangible and marketable assets are
    exposed to less financial distress costs.
  • Even when cash flow problems exist there still
    exists value in the business
  • Companies that own lots of real estate and
    buildings fit this niche
  • Firms with less tangible assets are exposed to
    higher financial distress costs.
  • High tech firms value is primarily in copy writes
    and human capital.
  • These assets provide little collateral
  • This may explain why we do not see high levels of
    debt financing in high-tech firms.

18
The Trade-Off Theory
  • The firms debt-equity decision as a trade-off
    between interest tax shields and the cost of
    financial distress.
  • Target debt ratios may vary from firm to firm and
    industry to industry.
  • Companies with safe tangible assts, predictable
    cash flows, and plenty of taxable income ought to
    have high levels of debt.
  • Companies with risky, intangible assets and
    unprofitable companies should use equity
    financing.
  • The trade-off of business and financial risks

19
  • Does the Trade-off theory of capital structure
    successfully explain how companies behave?
  • Yes Sometimes
  • High tech firms use relatively little debt
  • Airlines use relatively large amounts of debts
  • Aircraft can support debt even if airline cannot.
  • The trade-off theory works well at describing
    what companies tend to go private in Leveraged
    Buyouts.

20
  • No Sometimes
  • Some highly profitable firms use little or no
    debt
  • Merck
  • Most assets intangible
  • But the company paid 1.4 billion in taxes in
    1994
  • The paradox
  • Within an industry the most profitable firms use
    the least debt
  • Remember Boeing vs. its competitors

21
The Pecking Order
  • Asymmetric Information/Signaling Theory
  • MM theories assume that investors and managers
    have symmetric information.
  • However managers have superior information.

22
  • The decision to issue debt by a firm may send any
    of the following signals to investors
  • The firms prospects are good because managers
    are not afraid of adding more fixed cost
    financing
  • The managers believe the stock is undervalued and
    do not want to share future appreciation with new
    shareholders.
  • Stock is undervalued and too cheap to issue.

23
  • The signals of equity financing
  • Mangers are reluctant to add fixed interest
    expense
  • Cash flows and profits unstable.
  • Stock price is high and its a good time to issue
    and capitalize on the high price.
  • Evidence
  • Companies announcing seasoned equity issues
    usually experience share price drops.
  • Debt issues and bank loans have the opposite
    effect.
  • This helps explain the dominance of debt
    financing over new equity financing.

24
  • Firms prefer internal financing.
  • Retained earnings and depreciation funds
  • They adapt their dividend policy to their
    investment opportunities
  • High growth companies retain most or all of NI to
    reduce to maximize internal funds.
  • Sticky Dividends and and unpredictable
    fluctuations in profitability and investment
    opportunities results in a need for backup
    financing.
  • Draw down cash reserves
  • Sells marketable securities

25
  • If External financing is needed
  • Issue safest securities first
  • Debt
  • Convertible Debt
  • Preferred Stock
  • Issue Equity as a last resort
  • There is no well defined target debt-equity mix
  • Equity is first in the pecking order and last
  • The pecking order may explain why successful
    firms do not issue as much debt
  • They do not need to

26
Financial Slack/Flexibility
  • Other things equal it is better to be at the top
    of the pecking order than at the bottom.
  • Firms that are at the bottom need external
    financing and face the discipline of the capital
    markets.
  • Firms that have borrowed a lot lose that
    financial flexibility and need to issue equity.
  • Having financial slack means
  • Having cash, securities, and ready access to debt
    markets to meet financing needs
  • Do not want financial constraints to prevent you
    from making profitable investments

27
  • Financial slack will be most important to
    companies with many good investment opportunities
  • Positive NPV projects
  • Helps explain why growth companies avoid debt
    financing
  • The most powerful driver of value is a firms
    investment decisions
  • Maintain financial slack and flexibility in order
    to take advantage of investment opportunities.

28
The Financing Decision and Sustainable Growth
  • Remember,
  • G PM ? AT ? LEV ? RR
  • The goal is to develop both operating and
    financial strategies that meet your growth
    expectations.
  • Without resorting to equity financing
  • But maintaining flexibility if necessary

29
  • Rapid Growth and Conservatism
  • Need to balance
  • the negative signal of equity issues
  • The need for flexibility
  • For fast growing companies
  • The most important drivers of value are
    investments not interest tax credits
  • Do not give up flexibility and financial slack

30
  • Conservative Strategy
  • Maintain conservative leverage ratios
  • And financial slack
  • Minimum dividends
  • Maximize internal funds
  • Use Cash, securities etc.
  • Use debt financing when necessary but maintain a
    conservative ratio
  • Sell equity or reduce growth as a last resort.

31
  • Slow growth and the appeal of aggressive
    financing
  • Generating excess cash
  • Lack good investment opportunities
  • If we cant make more with our investment
    decisions
  • Lever returns through your financing decision

32
  • Strategy
  • Aggressive dividend payout
  • You do not need the cash
  • Take advantage of interest tax shields by issuing
    debt
  • Possibly swap debt for equity
  • Evidence

33
Free Cash Flow -- Agency Theory
  • The dark side of financial slack
  • Agency Costs occur when managers and
    shareholders interests arent completely aligned.
  • When a firm has ample or excess cash
  • Companies growing too slowly
  • Mangers may be encouraged to take it easy
  • Expand Perks
  • Empire Build
  • Or even invest in negative NPV projects
  • Free cash flow is defined as
  • Cash Flow Investment in Positive NPV projects

34
  • Examples of Free cash flow problems in the 80s
  • Mobile Oil
  • Exxon
  • Debt financing is one way of reducing free cash
    flow.
  • Interest and Principle payments are contractual
    obligations
  • Forces cash payments and reduces free cash flow
  • Sealed Air Recapitalization in 1989
  • Highly profitable because of patent protection
  • Lacked competitive incentives
  • Borrowed money to pay 328 million special
    dividend
  • Debt increased 10 times

35
Summary
  • In summary a firms financing strategy is a
    function of the trade-offs of debt financing

36
The End
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